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Caresyntax & Intel Collaborate to Address Surgical Staffing Shortage
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Caresyntax Blog
January 30, 2020
The evolving healthcare industry poses a number of challenges to both big and small hospitals and healthcare organizations.
One of the major issues the industry faces today is linking together disconnected silos of patient data. Although a large amount of healthcare data – particularly in surgery – is being generated at the moment, it is scattered across multiple platforms.
So, in recent years, it has become a prerequisite for data to be exchanged and communicated between different hospital IT systems and healthcare providers. This is where the concept of interoperability becomes critical to achieving better healthcare.
Interoperability in hospital IT systems refers to real-time data exchange without the use of middleware. Interoperable systems are capable of not just sharing information, but also interpreting incoming data and presenting it as it was received, without any change to the original context. With interoperability, data from a range of vital sources – including laboratories, pharmacies, and surgical records – can be exchanged and shared seamlessly between systems.
The Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, Inc. (HIMSS) defines interoperability and includes four types of data exchange :
Looking to the OR, interoperability enables surgeons to obtain a complete picture of a patient’s health – including prior treatments and images -regardless of the department in which that patient previously received care. Surgeons won’t need to rely on logging into multiple systems to obtain this information. It’s about convenience, patient safety, and accuracy. Interoperability simply allows surgeons to make better informed decisions during a surgical procedure.
Insurers benefit from interoperability – it reduces the cost from duplication of tests as surgeons will be able to see which tests have already been performed and why.It also ensures a higher quality of care, which benefits the underwriter of the care.
Patient matching and ensuring that information flows correctly from one system to another is a challenge. But linking patient information appropriately and establishing the correct patient identity is critical for surgical success.
Global benefits of interoperability:
Future outlook
Hospitals understand that the time has come to anchor surgical success on having access to the most complete information possible. Interoperability makes surgery more efficient, from avoiding orders for redundant patient tests to helping surgeons communicate quickly with peers. The use of interoperable hospital IT systems will eventually lead to better patient care, patient safety and enhanced experiences. Given that most of the hospital IT systems are now-a-days connected with one another over wired and wireless networks, it has become important to stay on top of interoperability developments in government and industry.